Tag: Zuma

  • South Africa’s highest court bars Zumafrom being lawmaker

    South Africa’s highest court bars Zumafrom being lawmaker

    South Africa’s top court has barred former President Jacob Zuma from running for parliament in next week’s general election.

    The Constitutional Court ruled that his 15-month prison sentence for contempt of court disqualified him.

    Mr Zuma was convicted in 2021 for refusing to testify at an inquiry investigating corruption during his presidency which ended in 2018.

    He has been campaigning under the banner of the newly formed uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) party after falling out with the governing African National Congress (ANC).

    MK secretary general Sihle Ngubane said the party was disappointed with the ruling, but it would not affect its campaign.

    “He is still the leader of the party. It [the judgment] doesn’t affect our campaign at all,” he said.

    Mr Zuma’s face would remain on the ballot paper for the 29 May election, Mr Ngubane added.

    South Africans vote for political parties, with the candidates at the top of their lists getting parliamentary seats depending on the number of votes the party gets.

    Some MK members sang and danced outside the court, while those inside the court – some dressed in traditional Zulu regalia – sat silently as the judgement was handed down.

    Mr Zuma has not yet commented on the ruling.

    Read Also: Court grants Ramaphosa interim interdict against Zuma

    ANC leader and South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa told a local radio station that he “noted” the ruling.

    “The court has ruled, and as I have often said, that is the highest court in the land and we have given the judiciary the right to arbitrate disputes amongst us in terms of our constitution,” he said in an interview with 702.

    MK’s emergence has raised the prospect that the ANC could lose its parliamentary majority for the first time since the end of apartheid 30 years ago.

    uMkhonto we Sizwe is the original name of the ANC’s armed wing, which fought apartheid.

    BBC

  • Zuma makes second court appearance on corruption charges

    Former South African President Jacob Zuma, who was ousted by his own party in February, arrived at the Durban High Court on Friday for his second appearance on corruption charges relating to a $2.5 billion arms deal in the late 1990s.

    Zuma faces 16 charges of fraud, racketeering and money laundering relating to the deal to buy European military hardware to upgrade South Africa’s armed forces after the end of apartheid in 1994.

    State prosecutors and Zuma’s lawyers are expected to argue over a start date for the trial, a rare example of an African leader being held to account for his actions.

    The national prosecutor this week turned down a request by the 76-year-old to delay Friday’s hearing pending the outcome of a separate legal challenge over the state paying his legal fees.

    The speed with which prosecutors have moved against Zuma is a sign of his waning influence since he was replaced as head of state by Cyril Ramaphosa, his former deputy, four months ago.

    Ramaphosa has made the fight against corruption a top priority as he seeks to woo foreign investment and revamp an ailing economy.

    Zuma’s supporters say the former president, whose nine years in power were marked by economic stagnation and credit rating downgrades, is the victim of a politically motivated witch-hunt. (Reuters/NAN)

  • Zuma gets love child from 24-year-old lady

    South Africa’s former President Jacob Zuma is hugging the headlines again with reports that he has fathered a new baby from a 24-year-old woman.

    She gave birth to his child in a Durban hospital last week Thursday on his birthday, News24 reported yesterday.

    The mother is identified as Nonkanyiso Conco and is set to become Zuma’s seventh wife.

    Zuma is 76 years old.

    “Yes‚ we are getting married‚ but that is all I can say. I need to consult before I give any interviews‚” she said.

    Conco is a director of the Pietermaritzburg-based Nomkhubulwane Culture and Youth Development Organisation‚ aimed at protecting the cultural practices of young Zulu women.

    Conco reportedly resides in the plush Ballito Estate Hilltop‚ home to some of the city’s most well-heeled residents.

    According to News24, the woman delivered the child at the Busamed Hillcrest Private Hospital last Thursday – Zuma’s birthday.

    Zuma is a polygamist who has fathered 22 known children from at least 11 women.

    Zuma reportedly visited his baby under strict security on Thursday night.

    “They had to clear the maternity ward for other patients. Hospital staff made it clear that this was strictly confidential,” a source with direct knowledge of the birth told News24.

    Ray Zuma, who is related to the former president, said Zuma was going to wed a woman named Nonkanyiso Chonco.

    When asked if Conco was the same woman who had given birth to a baby earlier this month, Ray Zuma responded by saying: “So?”

    “I can’t see why you are interested. When he was still the president, you [the media] were terrorising him, and now you are all of a sudden interested in him.”

    When asked about the details of the wedding, he said he was not privy to the details.

    “No date has been set yet. Both families must come together to decide on the date. We are still in the pre-nuptial phases of the process.”

    Zuma’s son Edward told News24, when asked about the baby: “We are not going to respond, or entertain any of that nonsense”.

    When News24 visited the hospital earlier in the week, an employee confirmed that Zuma had visited the facility.

    “Yes he was here last week. I saw him with his security. I do not know why he came through.”

  • Zuma zoomed out of office

    Zuma zoomed out of office

    Jacob Zuma, no thanks to his grave personal peccadilloes, has been zoomed out of office, as South African president.  But new President Cyril Ramaphosa would do well to study what befell his predecessors, aside from the angelic Nelson Mandela, the revered Madiba.

    The Yoruba, in ancient wisdom, call it the  cane, used to tan the older wife, is waiting, patiently in the rafters, for the swollen headed new wife, present darling of all.

    The Igbo?  Well, a mixture of old and new.  In the early years of this 4th Republic, when the Igbo political elite were fiercely sliding and tackling themselves for the Senate President’s job, out rang the fresh warning for every current — and temporary — occupier of the seat: beware of the banana peel!  That slippery, treacherous peel was the grave of many a Senate president of Igbo extraction!

    So it is, it would appear, with Mandela’s country.  Aside from the Madiba, none of his successors had  managed to complete his full presidential terms.  But maybe that was because the Madiba did only one term, before quitting as soul of the nation, then transiting from a ruinous apartheid enclave into multi-party democracy.  Wisdom!

    Even then, the case of Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma bears retelling.  The one was so politically antiseptic that he scorned politics with a vengeance; but loved policy with with a passion.  The other was the exact opposite: he was more at home with the rambunctiousness of the street, than the clinical cold of the policy chamber.

    Of course, with the street political hustle, and the lionization and demonization that come with it, he just hit the London Economist’s cynical portraiture — the African Big Man, to whom the delicate business of legal checks and balances mean absolutely nothing.

    That was the Zuma Achilles heels, which nevertheless not only undermined the new institutional gains of South Africa’s multiparty democracy but also jarred on the African National Congress, ANC’s corporate and organizational integrity.

    Mbeki and Zuma were, therefore, not unlike the political and governmental flotsam and jetsam that must be thrown in the roaring sea to save the mother vessel.  The crunchy question, though: when will Ramaphosa himself hit the Mbeki-Zuma point of no return, necessitating his own inevitable jettisoning, for the sake of the greater good?

    A piece of fatalism?  No.  Just the logical stretching of a grim trend.

    But the lesson therein for Nigeria is that the ANC at least has the capacity to rein in its political beneficiaries; and by so doing, sanitize and renew itself.

    That is the core problem with the Nigerian political party system, where people get elected but declare themselves lords and masters above the vehicle that brought them to power.  Yet there is, thus far, no room for independent candidates.  What conceit!  What hubris!

    But if it’s a consolation, the ANC is over 100 years.  No political party in Nigerian post-independence history has ever lived more than 18 years.

    Moral?  No quick fix to building robust institutions.  Only patience and punishing work.

  • Zuma slams moves to force him out as ‘very unfair’

    Zuma slams moves to force him out as ‘very unfair’

    Zuma said in his first public remarks, a day after the ANC formally asked him to resign.

    During more than a week of negotiations with the ANC’s key decision-making body, Zuma said that “nobody provided the reasons, nobody has been able to provide me with what I have done.”

    The ANC had urged Zuma to resign due to a string of corruption allegations.

    Zuma denied any wrongdoing on Wednesday.

    “There is no problem. There has never been a problem,” he said in the televised remarks.

    Earlier in the day police had raided the home of a business family linked to the embattled leader.

    Zuma says the ruling ANC has not followed party procedures in trying to unseat him.

    Read Also:  Zuma to face no-confidence vote on Thursday – ANC

    The ANC wants parliament to vote on Thursday on a motion of no confidence if he does not resign on Wednesday.

    “I need to be furnished on what I’ve done,” Mr Zuma says. “What is this hurry?”
    Agents from the Hawks, an elite police investigative unit, earlier entered the compound of the Gupta family in an affluent neighbourhood of Johannesburg.

    Three people were arrested in operations at various addresses, the South African Broadcasting Corporation reported.

    The family is suspected of using its connections to the president to influence Cabinet appointments and win state contracts, and has been a flashpoint for national anger over corruption in state enterprises during Mr Zuma’s tenure.

    Both the Guptas and Mr Zuma say they have done nothing wrong.

    ANC Secretary-General Ace Magashule makes a statement after the ruling party said scandal-tainted President Jacob Zuma must leave office .

    Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa is poised to replace Mr Zuma, who could face a motion of no confidence in parliament if he defies his party’s order to step down.

    Deputy President and ANC party president Cyril Ramaphosa is expected to take over from Jacob Zuma .

    As the Gupta-linked investigation proceeds, Mr Zuma could face corruption charges tied to an arms deal two decades ago.

    South Africa’s chief prosecutor is expected to make a decision on whether to prosecute Mr Zuma on the old charges, which were reinstated in 2017 after being thrown out in 2009.

    In another scandal, South Africa’s top court ruled in 2016 that Mr Zuma violated the constitution following an investigation of multimillion-dollar upgrades to his private home using state funds.

    The president paid back some of the money.

    NAN

  • ANC pushes for Zuma’s resignation

    ANC pushes for Zuma’s resignation

    South Africa’s ruling African National Congress (ANC) confirmed yesterday it had decided to sack President Jacob Zuma, but said leading members had agreed on when he should go.

    The ANC’s Secretary-General, Ace Magashule, said the decision to recall Zuma – party-speak for ‘remove from office’ – was taken after “exhaustive discussions”.

    The rand turned weaker after the ANC said it had not given Zuma a deadline to resign, softening 0.2 per cent to a session low of 11.9450 at 12:18 GMT from 11.8800 before Magashule’s news conference.

    The decision by the ANC’s national executive followed 13 hours of tense deliberations and one, short face-to-face exchange between Zuma and his presumed successor, Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa.

    Zuma, a polygamous Zulu traditionalist, has been living on borrowed time since Ramaphosa, a union leader and lawyer, once tipped as Mandela’s pick to take over the reins, was elected as head of the 106-year-old ANC in December.

    Ramaphosa narrowly defeated Zuma’s ex-wife and preferred successor, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, in the leadership vote, forcing him to tread carefully in handling Zuma for fear of deepening rifts in the party a year ahead of an election.

    In spite of the damning decision to order Zuma’s “recall” – ANC-speak for ‘remove from office’ – domestic media say the 75-year-old might yet defy the party’s wishes, forcing it into the indignity of having to unseat him in parliament.

    Shortly before midnight, the SABC state broadcaster said Zuma had been told in person by Ramaphosa that he had 48 hours to resign.

    A senior party source later told Reuters Zuma made it clear he was going nowhere.

    “Cyril went to speak with him; the discussions were “tense and difficult” when Ramaphosa returned to the ANC meeting in a hotel near Pretoria.

    “We decided to recall Zuma,” the source said.

    Read Also: Zuma asked to resign as South African President

    Another party source said ANC Secretary-General and Zuma loyalist Ace Magashule had gone to see Zuma on Tuesday morning to tell him formally of the party’s decision.

    The ANC is due to hold a news conference in the afternoon to reveal its version of events.

    One domestic report said Zuma asked for three months to resign, a request that was denied. Another report said Zuma simply told Ramaphosa: “Do what you want to do”.

    Zuma’s spokesman did not answer his calls. His son, Edward, said he would not comment until after the ANC had made its formal pronouncement.

    On Friday, one of his wives, Tobeka Madiba-Zuma, posted comments on Instagram suggesting Zuma, who has challenged and defied multiple attempts by the ANC and courts to rein him in, was prepared to go down fighting.

    The post even suggested Zuma believed he was the victim of a Western conspiracy.

    “He will finish what he started because he does not take orders beyond the Atlantic Ocean,” she said.

    South Africa’s economy, the most sophisticated on the continent, has stagnated during Zuma’s nine-year tenure, with banks and mining companies reluctant to invest because of policy uncertainty and rampant corruption.

    However, since mid-November when Ramaphosa emerged as a real ANC leadership prospect, economic confidence has started to pick up, while the rand – a telling barometer of Zuma’s fortunes – has gained more than 15 per cent against the dollar.

    The ANC’s decisive overnight move against Zuma, after nearly two weeks of deliberations, mirrors the fate that he himself meted to then-President Thabo Mbeki in 2008, after being elected to the helm of the party.

    The removal of Zuma, an anti-apartheid activist who spent 10 years with Mandela in the notorious Robben Island prison camp, also echoes generational changes in the anti-colonial liberation movements in charge of southern Africa.

    In August, Jose Eduardo dos Santos stepped down after 38 years as president of oil-rich Angola and three months later, Zimbabwe’s military unseated 93-year-old Robert Mugabe, the only leader the country had known since independence in 1980.

    Although Zuma retains a core of faithful inside the ANC and in the rural heartlands of his native KwaZulu-Natal province, there will be few tears shed in South Africa’s urban centers, where many regard him with contempt.

    “He’s a goner,” the Sowetan, a tabloid popular with urban black South Africans, said in a front-page headline above a picture of Zuma sitting with his head held in his hand.

    Central to the public anger have been the persistent allegations – now the focus of a judicial commission – that Zuma let his friends, the Guptas, use their relationship with him to win state contracts and even influence cabinet appointments.

  • Zuma cabinet meeting not ‘special’, spokesman says

    Zuma cabinet meeting not ‘special’, spokesman says

    The Presidency said South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma was chairing routine cabinet committee meetings in Cape Town on Tuesday and not holding a “special cabinet meeting” as reported in local media.

    Bongani Ngqulunga, Zuma’s spokesman,  said a full cabinet meeting was scheduled for Wednesday.

    He dismissed speculation in domestic media the embattled president had called a meeting to discuss his future with his cabinet colleagues.

    The African National Congress ( ANC ) met on Monday to discuss Zuma’s future amid growing.

    Read also: Zuma: ANC leaders to meet on Wednesday

    pressure on the 75-year-old leader to step down as head of state over corruption allegations and a weakened economy.

    Zuma, in power since 2009, has been deserted by prominent allies since being replaced in December as ANC leader by Cyril Ramaphosa, South Africa’s deputy president, who is now lobbying behind the scenes for him to step down as president too.

    Overnight talks with top ANC officials failed to persuade him to quit, and a group of Zuma loyalists said they would march on Monday on the party’s headquarters in downtown Johannesburg, Luthuli House, in support of the president.

    ANC officials said the party had summoned its National Working Committee (NWC) to meet at 1200 GMT at Luthuli House.

    The NWC handles the day-to-day running of the ANC, which has run South Africa since the end of white minority rule in 1994.

    It would need to call a meeting of the National Executive Committee to force Zuma to quit.

    Asked about the ongoing talks surrounding Zuma, ANC spokeswoman Khusela Diko said: “There is no crisis within the ANC, we are used to robust discussions.”

    The ANC’s top six most powerful officials met Zuma late on Sunday at his official residence in Pretoria but there was no announcement of the outcome.

    After the pro-Zuma group Black First Land First announced its march on Monday, a pro-Ramaphosa faction of the ANC said it would “defend” Luthuli House, raising the prospect of clashes between different camps within the party.

    The ANC said it respected the right of citizens to protest in a disciplined and peaceful manner.

    Opposition parties and some in the ANC want Zuma to go before his state of the nation address to parliament, scheduled for Thursday.

    Zuma has not said in public whether he will step down voluntarily. But he faces a new confidence-vote in parliament against his leadership on Feb. 22 filed by the opposition far-left Economic Freedom Fighters party (EFF).

    The EFF has asked the speaker of parliament, Baleka Mbete, to allow a secret ballot for the no-confidence vote, a decision which would increase the chances of Zuma losing the vote.

    Unlike in August when Zuma survived a no-confidence vote, a significant portion of the ANC now wants him gone.

    If he lost the vote, his entire cabinet would have to step down.

    Zuma will meet Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini at 1200 GMT on Monday at the king’s residence in Ulundi in the Kwa-Zulu Natal province, said Prince Thulani Zulu, a spokesman for the Zulu royal household.

    The spokesman declined to speculate on whether the king, a key ally of Zuma, who is also a Zulu, would add his voice to those urging the president to step down.

    Zuma’s spokesman Bongani Ngqulunga said the meeting with Zwelithini was “a longstanding courtesy meeting between the President and His Majesty which was initially meant to take place in January but was postponed due to diary challenges on both sides”.

    Zwelithini is the influential traditional head of South Africa’s biggest ethnic group, with around 10 million first-language Zulu speakers out of a total population of around 55 million, but he holds no role in government.

    “Zuma would listen to the Zulu king. Zuma is a traditionalist and has a power base in KwaZulu-Natal province,” said political analyst Ralph Mathekga.

    “The king is a bargainer, he could help Cyril (Ramaphosa) heal KwaZulu-Natal after Zuma goes.”

    NAN

  • S.African court orders Zuma to pay costs for challenging watchdog

    S.African court orders Zuma to pay costs for challenging watchdog

    South Africa’s High Court ordered President Jacob Zuma on Wednesday to pay legal costs for trying to avoid a demand from the anti-corruption watchdog for an official inquiry into alleged influence-peddling in his government.

    “He is ordered to personally pay the costs,” High Court Judge President Dunstan Mlambo said.

    The court is due to rule later on whether Zuma is legally compelled by the Public Protector to set up the inquiry.

    NAN reports the South African National Prosecuting Authority (NPA) on Monday extended the deadline for President Jacob Zuma to submit arguments on why he should not be prosecuted for corruption.

    “They must submit their representation on Jan. 31, 2018,” said NPA spokesman Luvuyo Mfaku.

    The 783 charges against Zuma relate to a 30 billion rand (2.20 billion dollars) government arms deal arranged in the late 1990s.

    They were filed but then dropped by the NPA shortly before he ran for the presidency.

    NAN reports that a South Africa’s High Court reinstated the charges in 2016 and the Supreme Court upheld that decision in October, rejecting an appeal by Zuma and describing the NPA’s decision to set aside the charges as “irrational”.

    The NPA said then that Zuma had until Nov. 30 to make submissions before it decided whether to pursue the charges.

    Spokesmen for the NPA and Zuma were not available for comment.

    In October, the Supreme Court ruling lifted the rand currency against the dollar as investors bet that Zuma’s removal may be inching closer.

    The president is unpopular with many investors after sacking respected finance minister Pravin Gordhan in March, a move that hit South African financial assets and helped tip the country’s credit ratings into “junk” territory.

    Infighting within the ruling ANC ahead of next month’s conference to elect a successor to Zuma as party chief has also sapped confidence among the investors upon whom South Africa relies to finance its hefty budget and current account deficits.

    One of South Africa’s leading universities, the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, said on Thursday that it had appointed Gordhan as a visiting professor.

    He will join other ANC heavyweights, who have ended up at the Wits after being sidelined by Zuma, among them another respected and ousted finance minister, Nhlanhla Nene, and former Reserve Bank Governor Tito Mboweni.

    Widely seen as a competent and honest technocrat, Gordhan has become an unlikely poster boy for public anger at the president, whose administration has been marred by missteps and allegations of corruption.

    Zuma denies any wrongdoing. (Reuters/NAN)

  • ZUFF 2017: Organisers want more festivals to market Nigerian films

    ZUFF 2017: Organisers want more festivals to market Nigerian films

    Chidia Maduekwe, Managing Director of the Nigerian Film Corporation ( NFC ) and Chairman of ZUMA Film Festival ( ZUFF ) has called for more film festivals to attract investors and create market for Nigeria films.

    He made the call during an interview on Sunday night on the side line of events at the 2017 edition of ZUMA Film Festival held in Abuja.

    The eight edition of the Nigerian prestigious film fiesta, with the theme, “Feast on Films”, holds from Dec. 1 to Dec. 3 at the Jabi Lake Mall in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    According to Maduekwe, as the Nigerian film industry grows, it needs to be promoted as a viable investment option to both local and the international business communities, and film festivals are veritable platforms to be used.

    “We are aware of the tremendous impact of the Nigerian film industry on the economy of the nation, Africa and indeed around the world.

    “The enormous impact of Nollywood, as the industry is popularly called, is to be further strengthened through Film Festivals,” he said.

    He further explained that in order to effectively showcase Nollywood as a viable investment opportunity and alternative means of employment and wealth creation, the once biennial ZUFF, will be held annually.

    “This is to position the festival and bring it to par with others in Africa and other parts of the world, and to sustainably stimulate film production activities in the country.

    “We are also optimistic that negotiation for co-production deals, sell of film rights as well as investment opportunities will be explored.”

    According to him, the 2017 edition of the film festival was packaged to showcase Nigeria’s film industry, art, culture and tourism as alternative means of employment and wealth creation.

    “This year, we mounted a re-branded ZUMA Film Festival designed to explore the economic and audiovisual potentials of Africa’s largest motion picture industry

    Also, a report states that the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, who was the chief host, commended the organisers of the ZUFF and pledged Government’s support to the growth of the film industry. ZUMA Film Festival ( ZUFF )

    “Since diversification of the economy is crucial to this Government, the movie industry is a viable option, and government will give all necessary support to ensure that it does well,” he said

    A reports indicates that the ZUMA Film Festival, now in its 8th edition, is platform for Nigerian film practitioners to network with their counterparts from other parts of the world and thus stimulates co-production and financing opportunities.

    It presents the Nigerian film industry as a vibrant and viable investment option to Nigeria and international business communities

    The 2017 edition of the festival featured ‘Emerging Talent Film Exposition’, where top filmmakers and actors, including Kunle Afolayan, held master classes for young and upcoming actors.

    It also presented, among others, exhibition days like Lagos Day, Kano Day, Abia Day and Morocco Day, as well as ‘Celebrities Hangout”, where fans met and familiarize with film celebrities of their choices.

    Film stakeholders and investors within and outside the shores of Nigeria attended the film festival.

    NAN

  • Zuma will no longer travel to Zimbabwe on mediation mission – Presidency

    Zuma will no longer travel to Zimbabwe on mediation mission – Presidency

    South African President Jacob Zuma will no longer travel to Zimbabwe on a mediation mission as previously planned, the Presidency announced on Wednesday.

    Zuma had planned to visit Zimbabwe to mediate a peaceful solution to the Zimbabwean political crisis on Wednesday.

    He cancelled the plan following the resignation on Tuesday of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe.

    Mugabe’s resignation was announced by Speaker of Parliament Jacob Mudenda during a joint sitting of Senate and National Assembly that was debating his impeachment motion.

    Under a decision made on Tuesday by the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Organ Troika Plus SADC Chairperson Summit in Angola, Zuma, in his capacity as the SADC Chairperson, and Angolan President Joao Lourenco, also Chairperson of the SADC Organ on Politics, Defence and Security Cooperation, should travel to Zimbabwe to assess the situation on behalf of SADC on Wednesday.

    In light with the latest development in Zimbabwe, the visit has now been postponed until further notice, presidential spokesperson Bongani Ngqulunga said in a statement.

    Read Also:  Jacob Zuma of South Africa